Semicon — Archive
Semicon Briefing
The semiconductor industry is experiencing a remarkable concentration of strategic deals in the week of May 9–14, 2026: on one hand, Western players are pooling resources through partnerships (Applied Materials/TSMC EPIC Center), acquisitions (Lattice/AMI, IonQ/SkyWater, Indie/ams OSRAM), and political subsidy frameworks (EU Chips Act II) to diversify supply chains and secure AI infrastructure. On the other hand, SMIC's record $5.97 billion M&A signals that China is massively accelerating its foundry expansion despite – or precisely because of – Western export controls. The Trump-Xi summit in Beijing has put the AI chip export question at center stage without a breakthrough: rare earth volumes remain around 50% below pre-crisis levels, and Polymarket sees a Taiwan invasion by year-end at only 7% probability – the situation is tense but manageable. Strategically dangerous remains that US export restrictions are accelerating China's indigenous development, while Silicon Photonics (Tower Semi) is emerging as a new battleground segment for AI data center connectivity.
Semicon Briefing
The semiconductor industry is experiencing a tectonic shift in week 20/2026: the Apple-Intel foundry deal – amplified by interest from Tesla and Nvidia – breaks TSMC's de facto monopoly on premium contract manufacturing and sets off an investment cascade that, according to BofA, could deliver €4.6 billion in new business to ASML alone. At the same time, the geopolitical front line is hardening: while the Trump-Xi summit signals room for chip-diplomatic compromise, the U.S. Congress is tightening export restrictions on DUV equipment further with the MATCH Act – a structural contradiction that fundamentally undermines planning security for equipment makers such as ASML and Applied Materials. On the M&A front, consolidation trends are solidifying: the IonQ-SkyWater merger creates the first quantum-capable U.S. foundry, while the Infineon–ams OSRAM deal is reshaping Europe's sensor landscape with the antitrust authority holding the balance. In sum, fragmentation of the global chip supply chain into geopolitically separate blocs is accelerating – with high opportunities for Western equipment makers, but growing risks from regulatory instability on both sides.
Semicon Briefing
The semiconductor industry is experiencing simultaneous intensification on multiple fronts: Intel establishes itself within a week through Apple, NVIDIA, and SK Hynix partnerships as a serious foundry challenger to TSMC, while Applied Materials and TSMC themselves seek to cement technological leadership in sub-2nm AI chips with the $5B EPIC Center. Geopolitically, the US-China chip war escalates with new equipment supply halts and the planned MATCH Act, yet the irony remains: the harder the export controls, the faster China's own semiconductor industry matures. Trump's forthcoming China visit (markets: 96% probability for May 13) and the simultaneous Hormuz blockade create a highly volatile geopolitical environment in which chip supply chains are deployed as strategic leverage – with immediate impacts on global investment decisions in fabs and equipment.
Semicon Briefing
The semiconductor industry is experiencing an accelerated reorganization along geopolitical fault lines during the week of May 6–11, 2026: On one side, US hyperscalers are consolidating supply security through direct fab financing (SK Hynix, Intel) and state-backed deals (CHIPS Act); on the other, China is advancing technological independence through DeepSeek's billion-dollar funding round and Kunlunxin's dual IPO. The AMD-Samsung 2nm MOU and the potential ASML equipment transfer from Samsung to Intel Oregon signal that foundry hierarchy is seriously shifting for the first time in years – TSMC is losing its exclusive status as the only reliable high-performance manufacturer. The greatest systemic risk lies in the simultaneous occurrence of capacity bottlenecks, export control escalation, and direct government financing on both sides, which will fundamentally redefine supply chain stability and pricing power in the long term.
Semicon Briefing
The semiconductor industry is in a phase of simultaneous consolidation and geopolitical escalation: While Lattice/AMI and IonQ/SkyWater demonstrate M&A activity across the board, US export stops against Hua Hong intensify the chip war and force equipment suppliers like Applied Materials into a difficult dilemma between AI boom demand and compliance risks. The Trump-China trip priced in at 96% is the most important near-term wildcard: it could either initiate a relaxation of export controls or – if it fails – trigger a new escalation level that directly affects supply chains from ASML to TSMC. Europe's Chips Act 2.0 reform and the viral ASML monopoly debate show that public and political awareness of strategic semiconductor dependencies has reached a new peak.
Semicon Briefing
The semiconductor industry is experiencing a tectonic shift in power: Apple's preliminary agreement with Intel – backed by the Trump administration's state Intel stake now showing a $56.5 billion USD paper gain – signals that geopolitical pressure is actively being used to reshape global supply chains and TSMC is for the first time seriously challenged as sole supplier. In parallel, consolidation is intensifying: IonQ/SkyWater, Infineon/ams-OSRAM, and the Sony/TSMC joint venture show that companies are vertically integrating and securing strategic niches before capacity becomes even scarcer through the 2nm ramp-up phase. Europe remains structurally behind – the revised Chips Act 2.0 comes late, and analysts doubt whether direct Commission investments can compensate for bureaucratic delays. The greatest escalation risk lies in the U.S.-China tension: China's 70% localization pressure and U.S. export controls are driving both sides toward accelerated technological decoupling, which could lead in the medium term to two parallel global chip ecosystems.
Semicon Briefing
The semiconductor industry is experiencing accelerated geopolitical fragmentation: while AMD is on the verge of a 2nm Samsung deal and Apple questions TSMC as sole supplier, China responds with an aggressive localization strategy to Western export controls, pushing internationally active companies into growing compliance conflicts. On the technology side, TSMC's High-NA EUV bypass signals a potential shift in ASML growth dynamics, while the EU sharpens its Chips Act II with direct investment rights to close the gap against US and Asian subsidy programs. European champions like Infineon and ams-OSRAM are consistently restructuring toward AI infrastructure, which secures the continent's strategic relevance in the global chip ecosystem in the near term. The biggest escalation risk lies in the intensifying US-China technology conflict, which increasingly forces supply chains into incompatible blocs and determines investment decisions for years to come.
Semicon Briefing
The semiconductor sector is experiencing a historic reorganization on multiple levels simultaneously: Apple is signaling for the first time concrete intentions to break its TSMC dependency through Intel and Samsung, destabilizing the entire foundry hierarchy. Geopolitically, US-China decoupling is intensifying – Washington is halting chip equipment exports to Chinese companies, while Beijing is countering with 70% local content quotas and rare earth threats. Europe is responding with a Chips Act reform that for the first time allows direct Commission investments in fabs, but remains structurally behind the pace of the US and Asia. The combination of AI demand boom (BofA: $1.3 trillion market volume 2026), accelerated M&A activity (Lattice/AMI, Intel/Tower), and escalating export controls increases the risk of a fragmented, regional chip industry with significant supply chain disruptions as a systemic risk.
Semicon Briefing
The semiconductor industry is in a phase of simultaneous geopolitical escalation and structural reorganization: the US tightens export controls against China (Hua Hong halt), while China threatens supply chain fragmentation and enforces domestic procurement quotas – a decoupling process that according to economists has already destroyed ~$158 billion in market capitalization at US firms. In parallel, Europe (EU Chips Act II with direct investments) and the US (CHIPS Act, Terafab) are mobilizing massive government capital flows into domestic manufacturing capacity, while M&A dynamics with deals like Lattice/AMI ($1.65 billion), Applied Materials/NEXX, and Infineon/ams-OSRAM (€570 million) are accelerating consolidation along the AI infrastructure value chain. Market participants are betting with 94% probability on a Trump-China visit by end of May, which could open a short-term window for de-escalation – strategically, however, is unlikely to change much about the structural decoupling of technology supply chains. Overall, signals are thickening that 2026 will become the turning point for global chip geopolitics, in which government industrial policy will permanently redefine market structures.
Semicon Briefing
The semiconductor industry is in a phase of simultaneous geopolitical escalation and technological acceleration: US export controls on China are showing counterproductive effects according to Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang – AI chip market share collapsed to zero, while China accelerates domestic development and redirects supply chains through Southeast Asia. At the same time, ASML and TSMC are signaling continued momentum with raised guidance and billion-dollar EUV orders from South Korea, showing that AI-driven capacity expansion remains unbroken. Europe is responding with the Chips Act II reform and for the first time enabling direct EU Commission investments in fab projects, while India is gaining weight as a new production location with state-funded multi-billion programs. The strategic core question remains whether Western export restrictions will delay China's technological rise or – through forced autonomy – accelerate it in the long term.